AITA for not continuing to pay into my ex step daughters savings accounts?

A 38-year-old father consistently contributed to a savings account for his biological daughter from birth, building a solid nest egg with help from her mother and family. When he married a woman with twin daughters aged four, he treated them the same way—opening matching accounts and depositing the identical monthly amount for five years, even though their biological mother never added a single cent.

The marriage collapsed after he discovered his wife’s cheating. Post-divorce, relationships with the twins naturally drifted apart with minimal contact over the years. He stopped the deposits immediately but kept receiving statements because their mother never updated the bank address. When his biological daughter turned 18 and used her substantial savings for a home down payment, no one objected.

‘AITA for not continuing to pay into my ex step daughters savings accounts?’

Equal treatment started during the marriage for all three girls.

I (m38) have 1 biological daughter. I never married her mother and I get along well with both. Since day 1 my daughter had a saving account that various family...

including her mom and myself, deposited an amount each month. Neither her mom nor I can access the money without signatures from both of us.

My ex wife came with a set of twin daughters. I met them when they were 2½ and married their mom when they were 4. I started a simular accounts...

I put the same amount into the accounts each month as I did my daughter. Their mother never put anything into the accounts. After five years, I discovered that my...

Divorce ended the deposits and most contact.

After the divorce was finalized, we went our separate ways. Their mother never updated the bank on her new address, so I continued to receive bank statements,

but I stopped putting money into the accounts. I had very little contact with the girls and as the years went by less and less.

The stepdaughters turn 18, discover the accounts, and demand more.

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When my daughter turned 18. She was able to put a good down payment down on a home because of that account. A few weeks ago, the step daughters turned...

They contacted me and they were upset that there was only a few thousand in their accounts, where as my daughter had tens of thousands. My ex-wife contacted me and...

Some of my family says that they were my daughters and were not at fault for the divorce. That I should want whats best for them, so I should have...

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Other friends say that they are not my responsibility. So their future is not my responsibility and that giving them the little money is better than nothing. Am I the...

This case centers on the limits of voluntary generosity in blended families after divorce. During the marriage the man went above and beyond by treating the stepdaughters exactly like his biological child financially, contributing thousands without any matching effort from their mother. Ending those contributions when the marriage ended in betrayal and contact faded is a logical boundary—marriage created the family unit, and its dissolution ended shared financial commitments of this kind.

Some argue the stepdaughters were blameless in the cheating and divorce, and continued support would reflect goodwill toward children he once raised. Family members pushing for ongoing payments emphasize wanting the best for them regardless of biology or circumstances. Yet no ongoing obligation exists for an ex-stepparent—especially when the biological parent contributed nothing, made no effort to maintain connection, and only surfaced to complain.

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On a wider scale, this highlights entitlement that can emerge when people view past kindness as an indefinite promise. The stepdaughters’ anger is understandable given the disparity, but expecting lifelong funding from someone no longer in their lives overlooks the mother’s primary responsibility. Protecting one’s own child’s future while setting clear post-divorce limits is reasonable and fair.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

The vast majority of users fully supported the poster, calling the ex-wife’s demands outrageous and praising him for the generosity he already showed.

Humancinnabon − NTA; they aren’t you me biological kids nor are you still married to their mother therefore not your responsibility.

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Your ex wife doesn’t seem care enough, not putting money into her biological children’s account meanwhile someone not their biological father is supporting them.

Not your issue you did what their biological parents should have done. The nerve of all of them and who agree with them.

workingtoohardstill − Nta. Whilst I think that step parents should treat their stepkids like their own while you're married, that obligation doesn't continue after a divorce.

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If you had stayed close it would have been a nice thing to do but there's no obligation. Their mother is ridiculously entitled to think you would have continued to...

and obviously didn't care enough to even find out what was going on. Good on you for starting them in the first place, particularly as their mother never contributed.

DesertSong-LaLa − NTA - The ex needs to look in the mirror. Your intentional and considerate deposit for 5 years resulted in $1,000's of dollars for her daughters. ...yet it...

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No gratitude was said. The cheating Ex is loud to deflect attention away from the truth: She never contributed $ while married or divorced from you. She never cared about...

Facts are facts. You don't need to apologize or rectify this outcome. These daughters were in your life for 5 years then no effort was made to stay connected; a...

Fact is fact. Enjoy your life and when you're sitting in your daughter's new house take a moment and know you did well. You gave her the means to stabilize...

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Adventurous-Boot-520 − Y’all had almost no contact with each other, and yet they feel they have the right to call you up and b__ch about how there should be more...

of the goodness of your heart that they themselves didn’t even know existed until recently. I don’t know why you’d even consider yourself an AH!

[Reddit User] − NTA - Your ex has sone nerve, and her daughter being mad at you says a lot about them too.

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Many commenters focused on the ex-wife’s complete lack of contribution and the unfair expectation placed on the poster.

Disastrous_Dingo_309 − NTA. Their mother (and father, if theirs is around) should have been funding their savings accounts.

Sure, it’s not your stepdaughters’ fault for the divorce, but their mother made a decision to cheat. Unfortunately one of the consequences of that is their mother needing to take...

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ModeMysterious3207 − NTA My ex-wife contacted me and chewed my ass because I had not paid into those accounts I'd have hung up on her.

She could have contributed. She didn't. They think of you as their piggy-bank, handing out money. It's good to be ex

Lavender_Everett − NTA What's with people always saying step kids are your kids? Let alone ex step kids? Kids who are biologically yours are yours regardless of what you want...

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Kids who are NOT biologically yours can only be considered yours if YOU WANT to consider them as such.

You don't owe a step kid anything but a respectful relationship and providing for there essentials, anything else is optional, and if you don't choose to step up, then it's...

A few users highlighted the entitlement shown by the ex-wife and stepdaughters, especially given the lack of contact and gratitude.

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Successful_Bath1200 − NTA They are not your children and not your responsibility. It was generous of you to put money away for them when you was with their mother, you...

Why would you keep paying in after their Mother betrayed you with another man. Tell them they are lucky they have anything from you and cut all ties.

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Obsidian-G − NTA…. first off there are not your bio children. Secondly, if there much never much of a relationship between you all then they have no basis for claiming...

This situation shows how divorce can cleanly sever voluntary financial ties, even when children were once treated equally. The man’s decision to stop contributions after betrayal and years of distance protected his resources for his own daughter while still leaving the ex-stepdaughters with a modest amount he gifted during the marriage—far more than their mother ever provided.

Do you think ex-stepparents have any ongoing moral duty to support stepchildren financially after divorce, especially when contact fades? Should the biological parent’s lack of contribution change expectations? Have you experienced or witnessed similar blended-family money disputes? Drop your thoughts in the comments below.

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